Two Paths
My
friend arrived a minute later and greeted me warmly with a winning smile, his
tailored suit slightly rumpled from a long day in the office. He sighed as he
sat down across from me, and his smile dropped momentarily, revealing a tired
and careworn face.
“Long
day?” I inquired. He nodded. It had been a long day. It seemed like every day
was a long day, even weekends, especially now with the burgeoning economy and
the flood of new projects coming the company’s way. Business was good and he
was happy, he said, but I knew him well enough to not completely believe him.
Had
I already heard that he was buying a second house? His wife was visiting
friends in
We
chatted about my recent volunteer work, a trip to a flooded province. He
glanced through the pictures I showed him and commented on the beauty and
simplicity of rural life.
His
phone rang and he excused himself, returning a minute later to apologize for a
hasty departure. Some urgent matters had come up, and he needed to attend to
them at once. “We should get together again soon. Call me next week,” he said.
I
went to see a friend yesterday. I drove eight hours up winding mountain roads
to get to a refugee camp scattered across four square kilometers of rural
countryside. A breathtaking view, but rudimentary common conveniences. Where
the road ended, the walking began. I waded through a knee-deep stream and hiked
up a deeply rutted mud trail, accompanied by a dozen eager children who had spotted
me on the road below. I sat on the step of my friend’s bamboo hut and smiled at
the ragged children who promised that my friend would arrive shortly. Then they
ran off in the direction of the local well to announce my arrival to the
others.
A
minute later my friend was rushing to embrace me, a six-month-old baby slung
across her back. She ushered me away from the throng of children that had
reassembled, playfully shooing away the ones that chattered over one another as
they tugged on my pants leg. In the dim, warm interior of her one-room hut,
coffee was served. As I savored each sip, I considered my friend’s thoughtful
gesture; my cupful was probably her ration for the week.
Our
conversation was broken and limited due to the mountain dialect she spoke, but
her face shone as she struggled to tell me about her new baby, her family, and
the small group of orphans she was helping to care for.
“What
do you need most?” I asked her, thinking to offer her the best from the
truckload of supplies I had waiting back on the road at the trail’s end. I
anticipated a detailed list in reply.
“Nothing,”
she answered. “Whatever we need, God supplies. He takes good care of us.” Her
baby began whimpering and she hugged him close, describing once again the joy
he brings her every day and mentioning nothing of the lack of money, official
papers, and other resources needed to give him a good start in life.
Another
refugee, a T-shirted boy in his late teens, came into the hut. After
introductions he sat on the matted floor next to her, his fingers skillfully
plucking a soft, sweet tune on the weathered guitar he held in his lap as he
listened to our conversation.
“It
must be wonderful to live in a city,” he said at last, a little wistfully.
“Have
you ever been to one?” I asked.
“No,”
he replied, shaking his head sadly. “But I hope to one day. I hope to move to a
big city and become rich and famous.”
I
smiled as my eyes took in the breathtaking mountain sunset that lit up the
western sky and my ears caught the happy laughter from a volleyball game
outside the hut.
“I
don’t think that’s what you really want,” I replied to his surprise. “Believe
me, sometimes the best things in life are the things that money can’t buy.”
Christina
Andreassen is a member of the Family International in
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